The Gateway
VOL. LVI, No. 32, UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON, ALBERTA
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1966, TWELVE PAGES
—Al Scarth photo
DISMISSED COLWYN WILLIAMSON
.-.. the tenure committee said no
Grant increases
necessary
By SHEILA BALLARD
The provincial cabinet’s recom-
mendation to increase per capita
grants to universities is an indica-
tion of the success of student lob-
bying in Alberta.
Officials of the students’ union
are confident that the effectiveness
of students as a pressure group has
been recognized in the government
decision.
“It is essential for the grant in-
creases to come through and we are
naturally very pleased by the cabi-
net recommendation,” says stu-
dents’ union president, Richard
Price.
On Jan. 7 students’ council pre-
sented a brief to the Board of Gov-
ernors outlining council’s stand on
residence and fee rates.
“We had a lengthy and worth-
while exchange of ideas at this
time,” said Price.
Students’ council has been ac-
tively campaigning to prevent a fee
increase for two years.
The last fee hike came in the
1963-64 session when tuition fees
were increased $50
Price
It is now up to the Board of Gov-
ernors to make a final decision
concerning fees,
However, the provincial govern-
ment does have indirect control
over fees—a grant increase is
in effect a deterrent o fee in-
creases, Price pointed ou
The crucial decision will prob-
ably te made at the Board of Gov-
ernors meeting Feb. 11.
“IT feel the premier’s comment
that he hoped the provincial grant
would cut out the necessity for a
fee increase is significant.
“I do not believe a statement to
this effect has ever been made be-
fore,” said Price
The federal government has in-
aes its per capita grant from $2
to
Since this will mean substantial
assistance to universities in Al-
berta, we are optimistic that com-
bined grants will prevent a fee in-
ee says Price.
ver, we must not stop now
but ee Begin to look at things for next
f
“T see ang possibility of a student
group atten various ea ae
tions, such as the ATA and the
FUA, which will be meeting next
fall in an effort to acquaint these
groups with our cause.’
Williamson, Murray
denied
U of A
Advisory committee rejects
appeal by philosophy profs
See
Tw o U of A assistant professors have lost the second round
of their battle to retain their positions in the philosophy de-
partment
The Cattway has learned that an advisory committee of
the Vice-President has recommended assistant professors
David Murray and Colwyn Williamson be denied tenure.
a re 2
Committee
decides
on tenure
A tenure committee’s recom-
mendation that two faculty mem-
bers be refused permanent posi-
tions has sparked interest in the
hiring procedure at U of A.
The tenure committee is an ad-
visory committee of the vice-presi-
dent of the university, responsible
for investigating the qualifications
members and evaluating
their contribution to the university.
Faculty members become eligible
for permanent positions at the uni-
versity after a five-year trial period.
Prior to this they are hired on an
annual basis, upon the approval of
the tenure committee which evalu-
ates their performance and presents
their rere meonetons to the ad-
ministrat
The committee advises the ad-
ministration to grant or deny ten-
ure to the faculty member request-
ing the permanent position—the
final decision, of course, rests with
the Board of Governors
In the case of a denial of tenure
the Board has no positive role since
it may merely accept the advice of
the committee and allow the con-
tract to lapse—without making the
actual decision to dismiss the fac-
ulty member.
faculty member gy seek
pooansideeating of his case by ap-
pealing to a grievance faeces of
the local staff association—but the
committee can only request recon-
sideration on behalf of the faculty
member.
The members of the tenure com-
mittee are drawn from both faculty
and administration.
The members are:
@ the university vice-president,
@the dean of the faculty involved,
@the head of the department in-
volved,
@one member of the department
involved,
®two members of the academic
staff from other departments
The members are selected by the
dean and the department head. and
approved by the university vice-
president.
University Vice-President Dr.
M man has apparently ac-
cepted the recommendation. How-
ever, he would make no comment
about the affair.
“It would be improper for me to ~
make any statement,” he said. “This
is a personal matter between the
professors eee and the univer-
sity administration.”
Both slant professors Murray
and Williamson have refused to
make any public statement.
On Jan. 3 the two professors were
first informed that their tenure
would not be renewed. They then
lodged an appeal through the wel-
fare committee of the Association
of Academic Staff of the Uni-
versity of Alberta at Edmonton.
COMMITTEE RECONVENED
After a hearing, the staff associa-
tion recommended that the tenure
committee be reconvened with
addition of a third member of the
piilecopiy: department, a tenured
mber.
The Vice-President reconvened
the committee, but in its prewel
form. The second decision was
same, although it took paras hts
longer to reach.
It is normal procedure to have a
tenured member of the department
involved on a tenure committee.
The only other tenured member
of the _ philosophy aca ae
pe than department head Dr. A.
M. Mardiros, who is automatically
a member of the committee, is
Professor Herman Tennessen.
Professor Tennessen was not a
member of the committee.
TERMS NOT ACCEPTABLE
A spokesman from the philosophy
department, who wished to remain
anonymous, and who is neither
Williamson nor Murray, suggested
that the decision was made on
grounds which are not normally
edie in considering tenure.
said there are certain pro-
paian rules of weighting judg-
ment in tenure case: 0 per cent
goes for teaching, 30 per cent for
scholarship, and 10 per cent for
community activities i: general
value to the departmen’
“There is no doubt et both are
competent teachers,” he said.
“Neither is there any doubt in the
minds of those who are pare ia
that both are able scholars.
“However, no one on the eoeiraite
tee made any attempt to become
significantly acquainted with
works of these professors, with the
ssible exception of the ‘Vice-
President, who heey a major part
of one of them,” he said.
Former and cafes it graduate and
Turn to page six. See “Philosophy” _
enure
Dismissal
sparks
dispute
REGINA (CUP)—A special
student assembly here heard
charges of outside interfer-
ence in the university’s dis-
missal of a teaching assistant
with radical views.
James Harding, 24, told.
more than 400 concerned stu-
dents at a Jan. 19 meeting
that the poonbedeicer st: de-
cision to refuse him tenure
was a threat to, academic
freedom.
It was the second meeting
held in an attempt to clarify
the issues and allow the stu-
dents to hear the principles
in the dispute.
Harding cited numerous
telephone calls from parents,
and particularly a call. from a
Brigadier Keehr, in which
Keehr suggested to the ad-
ministration that Harding
was not good for nee ‘image”
of the university.
Harding claims the ad-
ministration’s action had
been purely subjective and
personal with no considera-
tion of his academic qualific-
ations or teaching ability.
The head of the psychology
department’s committee on
tenure told the students’ as-
sembly that the department
ponnideked Harding’s quali-
fications adequate and his
teaching ability equal to any
other member of the depart-
_ ment.
Dr. D. Blewett also ou”
lined many instances
which Harding had taken ihe
initiative and sacrificed his
own time to organize depart-
mental seminars.
Harding is an instructional
assistant in the psychology
department and is the federal
chairman the Students’
Union for Peace Action.
Brigadier Keehr, the al-
leged instigator of the dis-
missal, declined attending the
meeting saying he had been
advised it would be bad for
the image of the university.
The administration fears
me as a threat to the system,
Harding said in a recent in-
terview.
tpebnle in Regina, as on -
other campuses, are extreme- |
ly sensitive about the hap-
penings at Berkeley last |
year,” he said. ;
The students have formed
an a ee committee to
study the dispute and pre-
pare a Se report
and recommendations on ue 3
affair.
2 THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
short shorts
| Professor L. C. Green to speak at opening of UN Model Assembly
UNITED NATIONS CLUB
UN Model Jeraniang di will open
mm. rm 129,
Cicer will
speak at the opening after which a
hae on Vietnam will be de-
cee Friday, Mr. Geoffrey Pearson,
member of the Canadian mission
to the UN, will speak. The vote on
the Vietnam resolution will follow.
The Assembly will open again at
7:30 p.m. in rm 129 ed bldg.
Population control will be dis-
cussed on Satu: naa The sessions
will begin at 9 a.
Delegates Hest Saskatchewan,
Winnipeg and Calgary will attend.
* s *
: WEDNESDAY
MIXED CHORUS
The University of Alberta Mixed
Chorus presents its 22nd Annual
Concert in the Jubilee Auditorium
on Wednesday, Thursday and Fri-
day beginning at 8:15 p.m. Tickets
are $1.50 and are available from
any Chorus member, in the Arts,
Education and Students’ Union box
offices.
* * *
AFRICAN STUDIES
The Anthropology Club in con-
junction with the African Studies
ommittee will present Mr. S.
Saberwal who will lecture on “The
History of Stateless ante s
Case Example From
talk will be held Wednesday i in rm
145 ag bldg. This will be the first
of a series’ of talks to be sponsored
by the Anthropology Club and the
African Studies Committee. The
public is invited. ;
THURSDAY
VGW DISPLAYS
Those people who are interested
in presenting a display for VGW
Feb. 19, and who have not done so
already, ae contact on Zender
at 433-3804 or care of the SUB
before eons
* * A
FRIDAY
CHRISTIAN CULTURE SERIES
Dr. Richard J. Schoeck will
speak on “Thomas More: Human-
ist in the World,” at 8:30 p.m, in
mp 126, aig
* *
SCM
The Student Christian MMavemnent
Coffee House is open every Friday’
at 9 pm. Entertainment is’ pro-
vided.
SATURDAY
INTERFAITH MEETING
Hillel is sponsoring an sip cok
meeting Saturday at 8:15 p.m.
the Beth Shalom synagogue, i
119 St. and Jasper Ave. Guest
speakers include Father Pender-
gast, Reverend Terry Anderson and
Rabbi Klein. Everyone is invited.
* * *
UNDERGROUND NOTICE
Underground is onsoring
Folk-Jazz sais re oe Feb. 9 at 8:30
p.m. in the Jubilee Auditorium.
Featured are Zen Magus, Wild-
wood Singers, Just Three, and
Hans Stamer, Underground mem-
bers receive 50 cents discount on
any ticket. Tickets are available
at the Allied Arts box office in the
Bay.
A QUICK CALCULATION
oh Your Future
Consider the time you spend getting your degree. It
would be about 11% of your working life.
most out of the remaining 89% your work should provide
the opportunity and the scope to use your professional
knowledge and natural ability to best advantage.
Cominco, one of the world’s largest mining, metallurgical
and chemical enterprises, has much to offer you. Cominco
is growing and diversifying. Its range of activities pro-
vides interesting and challenging opportunities for gradu-
ates in most branches of engineering, in geology, physics
and chemistry, and in other professions.
In calculating your future, make it a point to see our per-
sonnel representatives when they visit your campus.
write to our Personnel Division, Trail, British Columbia.
THE CONSOLIDATED MINING AND SMELTING COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED
To get the
Or
QUOTIDIE
Students are urged to take ad-
vantage of the publicity available
in the program board’s bi-monthly
publication of QUOTID Cam-
pus clubs can register their forth-
coming events by Feb. 15 for in-
clusion in the next calendar.
* *
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Any group or club intending to
use the Jubilee Auditorium in the
next two years should make re-
servations immediately. Contact
Mr. Pleures, at 439. 2776.
Fraser Smith
Coordinator of Student Affairs
* *
*
ESCORT SERVICE
Women of Delta Gamma desiring
a sober, well-mannered escort. for
the D.G. formal please contact Mr.
P. D. McArthur at 488-8981
* * *
"WATER SAFETY
A Red Cross water safety in-
structors course will be held Feb.
11, 12, and 13 and Feb. 19 and 20.
There is a $5 registration fee.
Inquire for further details at the
phys ed ea eas office.
* *
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Applications for the positions of
editor of The Gateway and dir-
ector of Evergreen and Gold must
be submitted to the eh ail
treasurer before Feb.
Both positions carry an honor-
aria. .
* s s
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Student discounts are offered at
the following stores:
1. Cal’s Ltd., 10005-Jasper Ave.,
10 per cent
2. Del Marche eco oa
Jasper Ave., 20 pe
The Slack Bhai 10027 Jasper
Ave., 10 per cent
Irvin: Kline, 10133- Jasper
Ave., 10-15 per cent
Klip and Kurl Salons (all), 20
per cent
. Alberta Giftwares, 10187-103
St., one third off most mer-
chandise and 24 per cent off
SU a
jewellry and watches
7. Jane Brooks Lid, Oli 103 St.,
10 per cent
8. Malfair Shoes, 103 St, and
Jasper Ave., 10 per cent
9. Modern Tailors, 9713-Jasper
Ave., 10 per cent
10. Sainthill ll-Levine Uniforms,
13560-97 St., 10 per cent
i; Famous Players Theatres, stu-
dent pri
12. Page ie ‘Clten (all), 10 per
cent
13. Smart Tailors,
Ave., 10 per cent
* s *
10413-Jasper
SOCIAL WORK
The Alberta Association of Social
Workers will discuss the field of
social work um Dinwoodie Lounge,
Feb. 9 at 8 p
Students are Se Hiltele to come
and discuss any problems they
have in regard to curriculum, social
work schools, personal qualific-'
ations, and salaries with profession-
ally trained workers from a variety
of local settings.
Coffee and doughnuts will be
served.
UNITARIAN
CHURCH
of Edmonton
12530 - 110 Ave.
“The Rat Race Well Run”
Sunday—9:30 and 11:15 a.m.
R. J. Wrigley, Minister
Dr. James E Tchir
a1 Terie B
Teper Buln
Telephone 422-2856
Interchange of Canadian cultures
benefit both Indian and White man
By PETER ENNS
The white man and the Indian
| have adopted features from each
other’s cultures, the Canadian
Native Seminar group was told
Saturday.
The white man’s dancing is get-
ting closer and closer to the
Indian’s war dancing, said Adrian
Hope, president oe the Metis As-
sociation 0:
Europeans ia smoking and
the use of the potato from the
Indians, he told the seminar.
While even the smallest Indian
tribes were voting for their chiefs,
incompetent Europeans were being
born into government positions, he
said.
It was not until after the white
man came to America that the
turopeans adopted the democratic
system, said Mr. Ho
The white man also has many
cul
But there are many things we do
eSabib want from the white man, Mr.
‘ope
He oma the white s
enslavement by the almighty dollar
to the slavery in ancient Rome.
Other speakers said the Indians
are searching for spiritual things
McGill again rejects
membership
MONTREAL (CUP) — Students
at McGill University have voted
to reject membership in the Union
Generale des Etudiants du Que-
ec.
In the second referendum on the
subject Jan. 26, 2,893 students vot-
ed against UGEQ affiliation, while
2,254 were in favor.
McGill students’ union president;
Sharon Sholzberg said she does not
plan to resign as a result. She had
previously said she would give up
her post if McGill students rejected
UGEQ membership.
She said ‘ an question Abe mem-
bership in UGE ver be
over un we are wasn bern of
UGEQ.”
Following the release of the re-
sults, Miss Sholzberg go is
UGE@ president Robert Nelson to
‘orm of the outcome. After
the call she said:
“He agreed with me that this is
in UGEQ
not the end. McGill will someday
be a member of UGEQ.
Miss Sholzberg said she did not
know whether McGill would retain
is membership in CUS.
Maes would object to CUS on
the e grounds as they object to
UGEQ,” a che added.
She said a referendum might
have to be held on the question
of CUS affiliation.
CUS vice-president Richard
Good commented in Ottawa that:
“if the paced of McGill mem-
bership UG. is an indication
of poadent’ unwillingness to par-
ticipate in the full development of
Quebec society, the outcome of the
referendum is disastrous.
“CUS believes in the right and
responsibility of Quebec English-
speaking students to participate in
both the English speaking and
capeete Dirac is nations of this
countr
things to contribute to the native’s |
e.
just as we are searching for tech-
nical advancement.
Presently, the white man is con-
stantly active; as automation dey
velops, the white man will
more leisure time and will have is
learn how to relax.
The Indian eed ale learned
how to do this, he said.
Two girls at the seminar told
-The Gateway that the older gener-
0)
ation is not willing to change
the white man’s way of life.
Many of the younger ones wish
to change, but they want to retain
certain customs such as their
dances, they felt.
A great number of Indians would
like to wee py of the material
things of the white man’s society,
but are not willing to make the
sacrifices necessary to obtain these
things.
In recent years many of the
Indian children have made sacri-
fices by attending integrated
schools, he claimed.
MUST UNLEARN CULTURE
They have had to advance faster
than the white children as they
were forced to unlearn much o
their culture in order to adopt to
the white man’s way of life, the
speaker pointed out.
Because of the difficulty of get-
ting teachers on reserve, speakers
said, the Indians have had to accept
the least competent teachers in the
past, thus increasing educational
lag.
Mr. Hope said that a few years
ago the children on his reserve
with a grade eight education had
the equivalent of the white grade
five student, because of poor
quality teachers on reserves.
The consensus at the seminar
that the greatest need of the
Indians is a right to control their
own iny.
$5,600
interviews.
Salary Schedule—
$3,500 $4,100 $4,800
$6,700
Northland
School Division
is seeking teachers for schools located in Northern Alberta. These
schools are in isolated areas but modern housing is provided for
teachers at a reasonable rate.
Preference will be given to teachers who have had some teaching
experience and are trained as Elementary Teachers.
$5,500
$7,400 $8,600
TEACHERS WHO AGREE TO TEACH FOR NORTHLAND SCHOOL
DIVISION IN SEPTEMBER 1966 MAY BE OFFERED A POSITION AS
AN INTERN FOR MAY AND JUNE AT THE RATE OF $13 PER DAY.
Mr. R. H. Sabey, Superintendent of Schools will be interviewing prospective
teachers at the Student Placement Office of the National Employment Service,
University of Alberta on February 7 and 8. ‘Please make an appointment for
$6,100
$9,200
$6,700
$9,800
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966 3
ARDA develops
communities
By AL SCARTH
University and govenment of-
ficials are increasing efforts to
develop Alberta’s human resources.
The department of extension will
expand its staff to initiate a pro-
gram of training in community de-
velopment and expand its current
program of rural leadership train-
ing.
Funds amounting to $153,000 will
be provided over a five-year period
through the Agricultural Rehabil-
‘itation and Development Act
to finance the program.
Both Provincial and Federal
agencies are using the community
bo tiara approach extensively
Indian and Metis groups, and
community development
approach will be the most effective
way to wage Canada’s War on
sibel fh. says Dr. C. A. S. Hynam
of the department of sociology.
The stepped-up program in
community development will pro-
vide essential training for field
personnel including district agri-
culturists and social workers.
rogram for teaching in
inter-cultural situations and an
advisory committee on inter-
cultural education are in operation
ithi e university
PREPARE TEACHERS
This program and committee are
designed to adequately prepare
teachers for work among under-
privileged, culturally differentiat-
ed groups in ieee Canada.
Socred leader
calls merger
publicity stunt
The Progressive Conservative
Club on campus is looking for a
publicity stunt, charges Dale Enar-
son, campus Socred Leader.
Enarson was commenting on an
article which appeared in the Jan.
26 edition of The Gateway. The
panels wee Bill Winship, leader
of the pus PCs, as saying Enar-
otk Samnastiod him regarding a
merger of the two parties for Model
Parliament.
Enarson said he did approach
Winship two months ago regarding
the possibility of re-alignment on
common grounds. However, said
Enarson, it was not a merger pro-
posal. It was an attempt to gather
those who believe in a common
ideology into a common category.
arson said it-has always been
Social Credit practice to investigate
re-alignment in times o
election time.
“If in fact Bill did say EN, was
written in The Gateway, it would
appear the PCs have had :
publicity stunt on the
campus and are now looking for
one on this campus,” said Enarson.
Of particular interest to potential
community area he oe is
a new course on an com-
munity offered by the depare an
of sociology.
Most dramatic of recent ac-
complishments achieved using
community development _tech-
niques in Alberta has been the in-
crease in rate of employment of
native people in the Fort Mac-
Murray area, and the drop-off of
welfare payments in the same area.
“A current idea is that com-
munity development is only for
Metis and Indian problems. This
is completely wrong. While the
Indian and Metis have been among
the first to benefit from this new
approach and while much remains
to be done in this area, the concept
can be equally effective in wor
among any underprivileged Cana-
dian group, regardless of ethnic
origin,” he said.
TOTAL INVOLVEMENT
It is difficult to agree on a short
definition of community develop-
ment, says Dr. Hynam, but all con-
cerned will agree that two key pie:
cepts are involvement of all c
cerned including the people to ee
helped, and self-help.
To eliminate paternalistic em-
pire-builders community develop-
ment officers are not obligated to
serve a single government depart-
ment, but are required to co-
ordinate the efforts of several
specialists into a total effort of
overall improvement and concern.
“The more Dentin from above
and the e easy money avail-
phler the less likely there is to be
tr human- ys leah develop-
hehe said Dr. Hyn
The present Co-unineist Jim
Whitford, is responsible to a
Cabinet ‘Committee composed of
four ministers whose portfolios in-
volve resource development.
“There is a growing need for
workers whose concern is with the
totality of a community,” said Dr.
ynam, “and unless there are con-
centrated efforts to make adequate
training available in sufficient
quantity, there is a grave danger of
community development falling
into disrepute because of un-
ey workers taking its name
in ay
aican said the White-Indian
prion has been given priority
as a major community problem but
is only part of the totality of con-
cern of community development.
“The community development
officer must be concerned with the
community as a whole,” he said.
According to Dr. Hynam the
initiative and development of com-
munity development in Alberta has
been provided by various groups.
“If there is any one person who
could be called the academic father
of community ceveprea in Al-
berta, it would be D Y,. Car
of the de partment ae oiueeee
foimastionn.” said Dr, Hynam
‘ QUOTIDE
QUOTIDIE
—Students are urged to take advantage of the publicity
available in the program board’s monthly publication
—Campus clubs can register their forthcoming events
by Feb. 15 for inclusion in the next calendar.
—QUOTIDE is distributed every 2 months.
The Gateway
Member of the Canadian University Press
Winner N. A. M. MacKenzie trophy for excellence in features 1965-66. Winner Montreal
Star trophy for excellence in news photography 1965-66. Second in Bracken trophy com-
petition for editorial writing 1965-66 and third in Southam trophy competition for general
excellence 1965-66
Editor-in-Chief - - - - Don Sellar
Managing Editor ............... Bill Miller Agcy de Editor. 2. Doug Walker
News Editor... Al Bromling —=_—— Page Five .......ncccssecsoee Linda Strand
Asst. ei Editor, ee Chomiak Fee piled Editor ...... John Thompson
Sports Editor ........... an Campbell Photo Editor .. . Neil Driscoll
EDITORIAL: CUP Dateline ae Ginger Sey
esk: Jim Rennie. iGartdonicts: Dale Drever, Peter
Bassek, Product tion Manager: Joe Will. Off eMaboder Peter Enns. Editorial Board: Don Sellar, Doug
Walker, Bill Miller, Linda Strand; Editorial Assitant: Carole Kaye. Librarian: Lois Berry.
STAFF THIS ISSUE—You can win a brand new Pontiac!
phone call saying you could win a brand new Pontiac.
te)
Just ahah 433-3155 and tell them you got a
Now that we got this goodie in the paper, ntl
° ah T ’
taffe la S per wei cho r M
Sheila Ballard, Lorraine Allison, Lorraine Minich, Aandy Rodger, Al Scarth, Ralph Meninychuk, Marion
e, paye een iet Plastic Man, Marcia Reed, Bill Beard, Shirley Neuman, Maureen Love and
The Gateway is published semi-weekly by the students’ union of the University of Alberta. The Editor-
a in
* ds liar 30 p.m. Monday. Advertising Manager
Final_copy deadline (including short short items):
p.m. Thursday; for Friday edition—7 p.m. Tuesday,
: Alex Hardy. Office phone—433-1155. Circulation
°
—8,300. Authorized as second-class mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for paymen
postage in cash. Postage paid at Edmonton
PAGE FOUR
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1966
thank you, mr. manning
Premier E. C. Manning and his cabinet are
to be heartily congratulated for their recom-
mendation to the legislature of a $235 per
4 student increase in its annual grant to the
university.
This increase is a concrete sign that the
cabinet is becoming aware of the Laer
problems not only of the university, but o
the students as well.
One of the interesting facets of this gen-
erous increase is it should virtually
eliminate any need for a tuition fee hike
next year. If the Board of Governors decides
to boost the fees, it cannot fall back on the
provincial government for an excuse for such
an increase. Governors cannot hae that
the province did not give it enough to run
the university properly. The grant joerc
has removed any pressure from the govern-
ment to advocate a fee increase.
The Board is running the university this
year with tuition, a $2 per student federal
grant and a $1 365 per student provincial
grant. Next year, it will be able to run the
university with tuition, an increased federal
per student pial and a $1,600 per student
provincial gran
When the Ra decides on next year’s
budget, it will have an increase of more
than $3 million in provincial grants, plus
the increased federal grant to apportion as it
sees fit. Unless some contingent situation
arises that requires an amount greater than
the projected increase, there will be no rea-
son for the Board to decide (and only it can
decide) on an increase in tuition fees.
another med show rolls by
harnessing youth
by don sellar
A new student movement centred on the
_ ideals of social involvement and social con-
science has appeared on the Alberta political
scene.
But no political party has yet managed to
attract The Movement into the realm of
practical ee even though all have tried.
| Credit administration has pro-
posed a ath ministry to harness The Move-
ment, and opposition parties have also been
quick to recognize the fact that half of Al-
berta’s population is beneath the age of 25
and therefore a prime political target.
Progressive Conservatives, meeting in Cal-
gary at the weekend, were exposed for the
first time to the formless conglomeration of
young ideas which have been bouncing about
on Canadian university campuses during the
last few months. t Calgary, the party had
its first real look at politically uncommitted,
but socially aware youth.
Conservative .Party leaders now realize
that it is one thing for them to espouse the
eed and lve [na of youth and to pro-
“an accent on youth,” but quite an-
Sse for them to find” a place in their party
for young persons who tend to reject party
as ee ea
Eve ung and aggressive Peter
Lou era iho someday hopes to lead a
revitalized Conservative hooking into pow-
er in Alberta, has failed to say precisely how
he intends to harness youth.
At the PC convention, young Conserva-
tives committed to Mr. Lougheed’s cause
paid nothing more than lip-service to stu-
dent activists who today demand a much
greater part in the running of university af-
fairs than they have ever had before. That
lip-service came from Joe Clark, U of A
political science lecturer and newly-elected
first vice-president of the Alberta PCs, when
he spoke meet o Ms party’s student feder-
ation Saturday
Clark told a ee) room that stu-
' dent activism is a force which Conservatives
met. pon with. He called on delegates
tribute towards the building of a
Beh chssident” student federation which
would foster student AL Piedad to all
levels of political endeavo
Earlier in the day, Edmonton verbs AE
leader Bill Winship spoke out during a
nel
discussion on the advisability of establishing
a youth iii in neers His words were
rife with frustrat
e question ee a youth ministry, he said,
is nothing more than “‘political expediency”
coming at a time when sell det parties are
struggling against political apathy.
n‘t attract members to our campus
club,’’ he Tadpitted, “And there's ae ee
talking about a youth ministry. We have
to get youth interested and involved in cae
ernment.’
Winship’s words followed those spoken by
three of four panel members, who were ex-
tremely critical of Premier Manning’s pro-
posed youth ministry. The three critics had
all expressed concern over the inability and
unwillingness of political parties to recognize
youthful ideas in the harsh world of political
reality. They spoke for The Movement—
which advocates social action and open pro- °
est.
And they were facing a pitifully small
audience already committed to political ac-
tion within the party framework, an audience
apparently unwilling to defend the political
Establishment or party affiliation.
he subject under discussion was you
but it was not made clear whether debate
was to be by youth or about youth. A
things turned out, the debate was watched
by a small number of young persons and a
handful of older party members who were
interested in listening, not in participating.
The panelists, three of them committed
to activism and not to party, frequently
showed signs of diester when the party-
dominated audience refused to join the dis-
cussion.
One prominent figure who did not take
part was Peter Lougheed himself. Mr.
Lougheed appeared only briefly—and did
not comment on any aspect of youth affairs,
though he has publicly supported The Move-
ment’s drive for student responsibility.
Ee alate eg es ougheed was there to
things Shick he ht Per icusly been told
about secondhand. Before him sat the phen-
omenon of committed party youth—mostly
silent—while the activists had a field day
attacking political bureaucracy and exped-.
iency.
“The future is ours,” Conservative ban-
ners proclaim; but not until a youthful and
exciting leader can find a way to harness the
forces he claims to want to represent.
the old ways
by bryan campbell
Provost A. A. Ryan and the Dis-
cipline Interpretation and Enforce-
ment Board have clashed over a
residence liquor raid.
A_ residence house committee
member who took part in the raid
was accused, by another student,
Omaya al con of “acting
against the ordinary principles of
good conduct and the best interests
of the student body as a whole.’
The Board did not fine the stu-
i's since he was acting in his
capacity as a eae Hall house
committee official, but in an un-
animous verdict they’ ruled he “‘did
act against the principles of good
conduct when he used a pass-key
to enter a room without knocking.”
Before Christmas an unidentified
student jumped from his fourth
storey window in Lister Hall during
another liquor raid, breaking his
ankle.
The dispute centered around
Provost Ryan’s contention that the
DIE Board had no jurisdiction in
residence matters, but when the
provost took the problem to stu-
ace Council on Monday, January
she raised these more serious
u know how long it
have other difficulties we are
aware of. When I say heavy
drinkers, | mean to the point
where they are going to fail
out.
“What do you expect from a
handful of elected house committee
. put yourself in their place. .
whos would you do?”
Even this all-inclusive statement
ports put the nightly losses of some
students as high as twenty dollars.
Something is wrong in Lister
Hall. Everyone agrees, but no one
has a solution.
spent three years in Athabasca
Hall in the afterglow of a great
man—Reg Lister. 1 never had the
privilege of meeting him, but his
friendly ghost haunted the old
building with its long tradition of
pide government.
ave a serious personality
ailing or something, because the
first weekend | was in residence
there was a dance and the fellows
in my wing organized a smal
rly.
It took place in my room, and
next morning as | lay on my bed
feeling sick with bottles all over
Aes room, there was a rap on the
It was Dr. Morrison, the
warden. I thought a was all
bth I had oes e hand-
book. He ga ie some
fatherly advice aphae drinking
and running up and down the
hall waving a bottle and left
me with a warning not to run
around with a bottle.
Dr. Morrison made you feel like
he cared about you first, and the
regulations second. are, drank in
Athabasca the same as they drink
in any other residence in any other
university.
But the parties in Athabasca
Hall were a Stele n for the pre-
sence of hall seniors. They were
always there in the thick of the ac-
tion and they passed on residence
frodition They kept the noise
down a the stakes low, they
toughit respect for the building.
They made residence life. It may
Sand trite, but the golden rule was
the fundamental regulation.
If you cannot eliminate
philosophy of the old resi-
dence.
In Lister Hall, they are trying
government, headed by resident
dean Terry Hore, is too young to
provide mature leadership. Also
ore may be too busy with his
classes in education to take time
out to help the students. The house
committee has no tradition to help
them interpret the handbook and
define their jobs. They are stuck.
| am not saying we can apply
the old system to the new resi-
dences—what | do suggest is that
the people in Lister Hall look back
to the days of Reg Lister and make
some changes. And now, before
it is too late.
consider blessed insurance
open some letters
behold our janey
and watch for brainy the brash
continuing on Friday
anticipate future needs
university
Dear Dr. Johns:
After reading the story in the
January 21 Gateway titled poindenty
Role Unclear—Johns’’, | feel com-
pelled to reply to your stated views
on the role of the student in the
university community.
The story seems to indicate that
benefit from cus life insurance
Bese following is the first of
a two part series dealing with
fife i insurance. The purpose of
the articles is to acquaint uni-
versity students with the CUS
life insurance plan and life
insurance in general. The first
article attempts to answer the
hada is Life In-
surance?’ The second article
will deal sSeeitically with the
CUS p
by bill winship
Probably the only two things in
this world that cannot be bought
with money alone are love and life
insurance.
As for love, each to his own taste
t as for life insurance, it is
well established that, besides money,
you need goo ealth. What a
surprise if you suddenly found out
that you are not insu urable because
you are classified as ‘’too risky’?
and at your age?
But what is life insurance? It
has been described as a complicated
It’s a monster for anyone
who doesn't know how it works.
But it is a miraculous money-making
device if you learn the basics of its
capabilities.
In an attempt to inform students
on this campus about the funda-
mental aspects of life insurance, The
Gateway interviewed R. T. Sewell,
the manager of the Edmonton branch
of kaa Premier Life Insurance
Compa
eCansiion fae! Life is the
underwriter of t fe insur-
ance plan sec aatad by the
Canadian Union of Students.
The company was chosen over
letter
inside for the outside
To The Editor:
After having received the latest
and poems, | find myself more con-
fused than ever. Is it just my
simple- minded intelligence which
can’t cope with its austere and pro-
found thought, or do other students
find it as incomprehensible as 1?
Does the cover really say something?
Must all the poetry concern itself
with sex or is there no other topic of
sufficient interest to be written
about?
Perhaps the problem is one of
quantity. Maybe the only people
who contribute articles to Inside
insist on writing such ‘high-falut-
ing’’ literature. 1 would welcome
a simply-written, clearly put story,
poem or play. Unfortunately | have
fo)
considered them the products of im-
mature, if not retarded minds.
May | propose a student literary
supplement for all—an Inside for
the ‘Outside.’ Perhaps my not-too-
intelligent colleagues and myself
could then find a better purpose for
Inside than using it for toilet tissue
or cigarette papers.
: Sonja Ypma
ed 2 .
the bids of 50 other life in-
su
dividual’s permanent insurance
needs.
According to Mr. Sewell, life in-
surance is the only instrument that
can create an estate at any moment
and at the very moment it is need-
ed.
Why should a student buy life
insurance? The answer to this ques-
tion is not simple, especially to stu-
dents who are unaware of the
benefits and advantages that will
accrue when life ping is pur-
chased at an early
Generally eee: however,
most students have a moral oblig-
ation to their parents or others
have made financially possible, not
anys their attendance at university,
but also their preparatory high school
years. Most students’ parents are
Paying some of the cost of university,
and yet it is not every parent that
can afford to do this.
By insuring their own lives stu-
dents are acknowledging, Mr. Sewell
said, as indebtedness.
this is highly im-
Lapb haber takes more
money to buy life insurance.
It requires good health. A stu-
dent may be short of money
now, but is fortunately most
probably long on good health.
After a student graduates and
is earning an income he will
be able to afford permanent
life insurance, but will he then
enjoy the necessary good
health?
This will be the time when the
greatest need for life insurance will
arise, but it may not be available
for this need because the person is
uninsurable—or else he may have to
pay heavy extra premiums for sub-
standard insurance.
e Canadian Union of Students
realizes this and offers to its mem-
bers the opportunity to anticipate
these future needs and to protect
their insurability through its CUS
life plan, Mr. Sewell explained.
Speaking about life insurance in
general, Mr. Sewell pointed out that
in Canada, all life insurance com-
panies pay two out of every three
dollars in benefits to the living policy
holder—exclusive of loans
The Canadian life insurance in-
dustry operates, Mr. Sewell said,
under the highest standards of re-
gulation in the world.
‘Life insurance is a major
export of Canada to many
foreign countries. And there
ever received one cent less than
the amount provided for in
Canadian life insurance con-
t
make this statement,” Mr.
Sewell said.
Certainly one of the most con-
fusing things about life insurance
is the terminology involve: Mr.
Sewell attempted to meclain some
of these terms for The Gateway.
nent Insurance—this is
any life insurance policy that in
addition to providing insurance pro-
tection carries with it cash values
which increase over the policy years.
erm Insurance—this provides
coverage without accumulating cash
value.
@Face Value—on type of
policy this is the benatie. available
of the sum insured.
ash Surrender Value—the
amount of money a permanent life
insurance policy ean be surrendered
for at any given tim
®@ Paid- Up Valescthe amount of
permanent insurance that can re-
main in force with no a pre-
miums at any given tim
@Waiver of P alin ait the
event of total disability extending in
excess of six months the insuring
company assumes payment of the
premiums.
® Waiver of Premium Income—in
addition to Waiver of Premium bene-
fit this pays a monthly income equal
to $10 per month per $1,000 of the
sum insured for the duration of the
disability (normally found on _ per-
manent policies).
@Accidental Death (double in-
demnity)—usually provides an addi-
tional death benefit equal to the
face value in the event of accidental
death
® Dividends—any permanent life
policy can be purchased as a par-
ticipating or non-participating policy.
In participating, the holder of the
policy will share in the profits of the
company by receiving annual divi-
mortality experience. Ninety-seven
and one-half per cent of all such
profits on participating insurance
must be paid to the policy holder.
Non-participating policies ac-
cumulate cash value only without
dividends. There is a higher pre-
mium for participating policies, but
the cee return will more than
offset t
Haake "actined some of the com-
ewell then brief-
ly described five basic types of per-
manent life insurance available.
1, Ordinary Life or Whole Life—
this insures a person for the whole
of his life with premiums payable
for the whole of his life or such
shorter periods determined by the
policy holder—e.g. at retirement.
2. Life Paid at Age 65—premiums
gre payable to age 65 with the face
amount of the policy remaining in .
full force after that date with no
urther premiums paya
3. Limited pay life policies—e.g.
10 pay life, 20 pay life, life paid
age 55—these function identically
to life paid age 65 in that once the
period or age limit contracted for is
reached the ee value remains in
force with no further premiums.
But the shorter fs period, the higher
the premium
. Endowm nents—these are avail-
or to predetermined ages—the sa
as limited pay life plans. The dis-
tinguishing feature is that at
maturity the cash value of the en-
dowment equals the original face
value of the policy. This money is
available for any purpose at maturity
age.
5. Pension Policy—this is an ac-
celerated endowment policy with
cash values maturing between one-
and-one-ha two times the
original value of the plan.
To The ee
f the many hundreds of stu-
dent Sublications to come across
The Gateway, on whose front
page Janey Craig oe the
best of Western Canad The
East knows no such Aula won-
You have thawed out our
We are certain that with such
attractions your production of Li’l
will meet with unparallel-
ed success.
With congratulations and best
wishes, and in eager anticip-
ation of your future issues, we
remain
hers admiringly,
William M. Carroll
(Columnist)
Public Relations)
Allan Rock,
(Co-Associate ‘Editor)
(The Fuler
University ine Ottawa)
Miss Craig has agreed to
show off some of Western
Canada’s best, especially for
the Fulcrum staff, and here
she is.—The Editor.
congratulations
janey
an open letter to the
president
your attitude is basically defensive
and a person gets the feeling that
you think students are privileged
to be part of the university. Ob-
viously students are essential and
important members of the university,
with the capacity to make worth-
while contributions to the quality of
life on the university campus. You
suggest that students will be allow-
ed to present their views in the class-
room and in Committee on Student
Affairs meetings—clearly this limit-
ed participation does not enable us
to make a full contribution to
governing the university or to the
“pursuit of truth’’.
In a further paragraph, you
exhibit a misunderstanding of
our ideas on university govern-
ate the university’.
states the role which students
hope to play, namely: ‘students,
as an integral and essential
part of the university, desire to
obtain some degree of influence
and responsibility with regard
to those affairs’ (which are of
interest to all sectors of the
university), Thus we do not
intend to control the university
but rather to work with the
faculty in fulfilling the purpose
of our university.
Later in the brief you suggest that
a student member of the Board of
Governors “
velopment of persons not merely the
supply of production instruments for
our industrial system
We are alaraied about the
huge undergraduate classes,
the poor student-faculty dia-
logue, the often questionable
quality of teaching and the
construction of teaching facili-
ties with no lounges to enable
an exchange of ideas between
creative criticism of society as
well as self-examination of our
institution,
These are some of the concerns
that led us to petition for student
members on the Board of Governors
and the General Faculty Council.
Many students do have leisure time,
following their studies, in which they
can make a meaningful patie i
to the university community.
role student in “university
n import-
ant part of his total educational ex-
perience at university.
While you no doubt share
many of these concerns, I really
feel that you under-estimate the
vital contribution which stu-
dents can make fo the univer-
sity. For if our university is to
become great, it will depend on
both the students and the
faculty.
May | suggest, in closing, that you
rejoice in the fact that students are
versity and are not
simply passive, recipients of formal
education. :
My intention of writing this letter
is not to present a militant con- |
ideas pate
letter at your convenien
Yours ae truly,
Richens ard ne Price
_ The Students! Daca
in this
6 THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
; —Al Scarth photo
THE NIGHTS OF COKE AND DOUGHNUTS—Taking
their usual break from the tedious business of rehearsal the
cast of Li’l Abner gathers in SUB caf for sustenance. Lil
Abner will be presented in the Jubilee Auditorium Feb. 17, 18
and 19; tickets are now on sale in SUB and the Allied Arts box
office in the Bay.
THE ST. ALBERT PROTESTANT
SEPARATE SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 6
will be interviewing prospective teachers at the Student
Employment Office on
Monday, January 31 and Tuesday, February 8
Teachers are required for September 1966 in
Division I — Training in the teaching of reading.
Division II — Language-Arts, Oral French, Lib-
rary, Music.
Division III — Library, Oral French, Music, In-
dustrial Arts, Art, Science.
High School — Business Education.
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
Summer or longer employment avail-
able on surface or underground at $1.60
per hour minimum. 48 hours per week
minimum. Students who will work un-
derground and who plan to stay out a
year are specially welcome. Men who
appear capable will be trained and
should earn $450-$550 per month.
See Mr. J. E. Lemay, N.E.S. Student Placement
Supervisor for details and interview date.
Discovery Mines Limited, Discovery, N.W.T.
Flying Club.
offers to assist
emerging clubs
By EKKEHARD KOTTKE
The U of A pit pe Club has in-
vited studen f
Education report
Four-year program
essential -- Stewart
By ANDY RODGER
University of Alberta under-
graduates may soon have to take
our years training to obtain
their degrees.
This is one of several recom-
mendations made by Dr. Andrew
Stewart in a “Special Study on
Higher Education” presented re-
cently to the provincial govern-
ment.
The report was called for in view
of the greatly increased enrolments
at U of A. The number of stu-
dents on the combined Edmonton
and Calgary campuses will reach
34,850 by 1975, according to one
estimate contained in the report.
It was to alleviate this student
explosion, and consequent crowd-
ing of facilities, that the provincial
government instituted the Public
Junior Colleges Act in 1959. Under
the Act, junior colleges located
in smaller municipalities, such as
Lethbridge and Camrose, were to
provide first-year university train-
ing.
In Dr. Stewart’s opinion, the
junior colleges have failed. He
recommends a new college aye
in their place.
is new system would create a
third level of education; between
the university and the high school.
The new institutions, called District
Colleges, would not only provide
university courses, but also provide
a terminal system for students
wanting more than high school, but
less than university training.
The District Colleges would thus
provide a relief for the crowded
universities. They could also be
° in
BC.,; Sear ome and Manitoba
to form university flying clubs in
a bid to promote aviation.
Chuck Avery, treasurer, has
promosed to assist interested stu-
dent groups by showing them how
to ferret out financial assistance for
student flying ventures from stu-
ents’ union and other groups.
AR a tour of the Namao Airport
Sunday the club was told that the
Air Force’s need for qualified pilots
has taken a tremendous upturn re-
cently.
Wing Commander Brice outlined
a program of so-called short short
commissions which pay a univer-
sity student up to $4, ee _yearly
without interfering with h:
versity training or committing him
to a subsequent permanent com-
mission
For the average weekend flyer,
members rent most of the planes
used by them at special club rates
from the aia Flying Club or
Gateway Aviatio:
A recent fly- oh “to Banff cost a
member about $15. e cost of a
proposed fly-in to Saskatoon was
estimated at $30 for the weekend
y Hugh Garvais-Reed, president. .
Graeme Proudfoot said these
fly-ins are to establish better inter-
varsity relations.
“The most dangerous part of
these flights is the trip to and from
the airport,” he said in response
to a question about the risks in-
volved.
Canadian pilots are much more
proficient than their American
counterparts, students or otherwise,
e said.
The club stresses planning of
ght plans as just one of the many
eh factors imposed on it by the
dept. of transport.
Varsity Guest Weekend
the club intends to assemble a high
performance glider plane in Pybus
invited to 15-minute flights over
the university grounds for only $2
Nae Bice Le ee Hanuportetion to
e ai
Philosophy prof
continued from page one
senior undergraduate students of
assistant professors Murray and
Williamson submitted a letter to the
committee on their behalf.
The students said that in their
opinion both pisiescn were excel-
lent teachers, and they deplored
their dismissal.
f all students available, only
two refused to sign the letter. Both
of these had done poorly in their
ee ah courses,
e department spokesman also
changed the administration with
cru
“Bow professors were told by the
department head that they had no-
ici to worry about as far as ten-
e@ was concerned. They were not
told about the committee decision
until after they had returned from
a conference in New York, where
both turned agoun numerous job
’ offers,” he s
e Spokane also claimed that
this decision would destroy the
philosophy department at the U of
A.
“We have now the most exciting
philosophy department in Canada.
It is a pity that we will be depriv-
ed, for I am quite certain that the
rest of ther professional philosophers
in this department will soon be
Sapa | for Positions elsewhere,”
e sai
“I am very much concerned that
the U of A cae be blacklisted in
‘academic circles,” he igs
r. Williamson has a in
philosophy from the Tabonaity of
Leeds and a Bachelor of Philosophy
degree from Oxford. He has been
. here 3 and one-half years and is
ate of Commonsense.
urray has and M.A.
ioe ‘Dalhousie University and has
done 4 years of post graduate work
at Oxford. He has been active in
concert calibre. meee been here
4 and one-half y
used for pic education and ex-
tension servic
University cooestice is already
affecting the Edmonton campus of
U of A. Building programs are
three years behind requirements, -
and lack of ae Vatindpe high-
rise building. ause of suc
crowding, the iepont recommended
t ximum campus size as
18,000. —
After the campus reaches this
size, either a satellite campus or
a separate university would have
to be built. Such schemes have
ouver. But it is hoped that a
District College in Edmonton would
take a large number of first. and
second year students. Incentives
to attend District College rather
than U of A, perhaps reduced fees,
would be used.
report recommended the
four-year baccalaureate degrees
for two reasons:
@increased available psi a
requires longer periods of ed-
ducation
@the four-year program is in line
with requirements of other: uni-
versities in Canada.
INSUFFICIENT TIME
College training would be for
two years. This leaves only one
year, under the present system, to
be spent on the university campus.
Dr. Stewart feels this in-
sufficient.
Presently the university .grad-
uates students only if they have at
least five courses from r
The report admits several dif-
ficulties in setting up the District
Colleges. The problem of obtain-
ing personnel, which already at
some universities is acute, would
probably result in over-all short-
ages.
Educational techniques would
have to Fe developed to meet the
peculiar needs of the District Col-
leges, a curriculum would
have to conform both to university
requirements and the unique col-
lege situation.
Neither of these problems has
yet been solved.
At present costs per student at
U of A are about $1,900 a year.
These costs will increase to about
$3,650 in 1975. hat costs at a
District College would be is un-
nown, but student payments and
expenditures would probably be
less than at university.
DELAY SECOND CAMPUS
If a District College were estab-
lished at Edmonton, by 1975 the
university wou not probably
have reached its maximum enrol-
ment.
second campus would be delayed,
and duplication of erat ated facili-
ties would be av
If a second came or a second
university is to be avoided, said
Dr. Stewart, “. . . it would seem
desirable to limit the admission of
ies tee to the universities. This
uld be done by raising the ad-
silacion requirements for direct
admission to courses in the now
three-year program ” A smaller
freshman dropout rate would be
one result of such a m
The report made several con-
clusions concerning the admini-
stration and ceysepment of the
District College
© “Students. Polanatie to enter
university programs which now re-
quire three years from Grade 12
to the degree should be required to
attend for two years at colleges
operated under the auspices of
District Boards before entering
university.”
@Since the main student ae
ation pressure is now at Edmonto:
a second campus or university ae
only be avoided by geekan t many
f A Ed.
puders away sree U o
mon
THE WORK BEGINS—Participants at the 1965 International WUS Workcamp at Seoul,
Korea, begin clearing the site of the proposed student centre.
World. University Service projects, and part of the funds o upper them comes from the
SHARE campaign to be held on this campus from Feb. 7 -
Workcamp is one of many
U of A plans ‘Education Corps’
to promote post-secondary education
see LORRAINE MINICH
An “Education Corps” from the
U of A is expected to go into ac-
tion in May.
The plan is a high school visita-
tion program designed to convince
high school students of the values
of continuing their education.
e executive council of the stu-
dents’ council and a CUS repre-
sentative met lost. week with school
superintendents from rural areas.
Fifteen school superintendents and
the president of NAIT po tenta-
tive approval to the p ‘am.
The atgancrintandenic. will discuss
the plans with high school princi-
als. Also, an attempt will be made
to find out exactly what high pte te
students are interest in,
program will be much more ue
cessful if the concerns and ques-
tions of the high school students
are made known to the students’
union of the uni heer:
In Rpnresching: the yccinank af-
fecting students in their decision
regarding post-secondary educa-
tion, the education corps will at-
tempt to present a realistic ap-
proach to universi e.
With the aid of professors, the
program will present the academic
and financial aspects of university
and the problem of adjustment
from high school to university life.
e actual phlatury! is expected
to be as varied as tim
sample program ‘would include:
speeches, panels, about uni-
versity and vocational life, and in-
formal conversations between
Sic
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pa) groups of students and par-
“The pilot path which will go
into effect in May will involve four
northern Pair Poiloes and four
southern divisions. education
corps team will likely gee of two
university students, a versity
professor, and one vacutional stu-
t.
U of A plans
international
studies centre
The University of Alberta is the
proposed site for a research center
for international studies.
The idea originated in “the inter-
national relations section of the de-
partment of political science which
recommended its establishment to
the Academic Planning Commission
for study.
Prof. King Gordon, head of the
department of political science, told
The Gateway the study at the
center would involve interdisci-
plinary research.
number of other departments
such as economics, history, socio-
logy, and agriculture are also inter-
ested in the center
Prof. Gordon said an example of
a problem which could be studied
at the center is the population
problem. As well as involvement
by the denhrontadt of political sci-
ence, there would be economic, ag-
ricultural, om sociological aspects
of this probl Other possible
It is hoped the center will attract
many angers pil international stu-
es. e g professors and
students cate: ee available to grad
students in the fields of research.
“Right now we have the beginn:
ings of a very good internapiontl
relations section in our
ment,” said Prof. Gordon.
The Academic Planning Com-
mission has submitted a recom
mendation for immediate establish-
ment of the center. The program
will have to have the approval of
the General Faculty Council and
the Board of Governors before
establishment can begin.
“T’'m greatly interested in the
platy it will be a tremendous thing
ac r this university,” said Prof. Gore
on,
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966 ra
Political clubs less
important
Portigal
Address to PC convention gives
blast and suggests alterations
ALGARY—tThe political science clubs on campus are be-
coming less and less important each year, a U of A student
said Friday.
Lawrence Portigal, past president of the Progressive Con-
servative Student Federation, was speaking to the Annual
PC Convention in Calgary.
Languages
converging
-- linguist
People tend to hang on to their
languages with the same attach-
ment that we show for cowboy
suits even after these have become
obsolete.
This view was expressed by Dr.
Swadesh, a world-famous linguist
who specializes in the study of the
origin of language.
Dr. Swadesh, a professor of lin-
guistics and anthropology at ae
University of Mexico, re in
guest lecture here rsday,
“The Origin and Diversification of
In his lecture he covered time
depths ranging from 5,000 to two
million years.
Even at that time humans had
flat teeth as opposed to the sharp,
canine teeth of animals, he said.
This, together with other linguis-
tically oriented data, helps to dis-
prove certain theories about the
Re al development of man
from the a ey are cousins at
best, he ee
Animals are incapable of forming
consonants, he found. The familiar
“miau” of cats is actually an “iaaou”
with some nasalization, but without
lip closure
He mentioned also the case of a
chimp that had been house-trained
after only a few trials. But ‘Vicky’
could only communicate her priv-
ate needs by waving a diaper.
Man, however, was able to use
consonants at a point in his history
when his language consisted of a
mere handful of pointing words.
Swadesh compared this lan-
guage stage to the experience of a
person who suddenly noticed a car
backing up against him. In such a
pene any sound would do, he
said.
Demonstrative roots that can still
be traced today have a consonant-
vowel sequence. Our word “so”
belongs into this group.
This hard core of pointing words
and maybe 100 reconstructable
association words served Dr. Swa-
desh as an ancestral language for
languages as far apart as America,
Asia, and Africa.
He showed the relationship of
such divergent languages to each
other by proving their relationship
to their next-door neighbor, travel-
‘ing and recording phonetic field
data from one Indian community to
the next.
Thus he discovered a series of
dialectal Sacistigne which he span-
ed over three continents with hard-
ly a cognate missing in his
chain of relationships. He called
this a wave theo:
Dr. Swadesh said languages are~
converging e use 0}
identical fecontteh: vocabularies.
He will teach a course in lingu-
istics on American Indian Re
uages this summer at U of A
Political clubs have failed to
change with the change in the type
of student on campus, said Portigal.
The party political clubs don’t mean
or stand for anything, and there is
no communion of beliefs, ideas, or
aims among members of the organ-
ization.
Portigal said pone pref Ney
must drastically alter thei
proach so they can atract both he
academic and activist type of stu-
nt.
He stressed the need for groups
to examine social problems, not
just political problems.
Portigal ‘questioned the merit of
campus el Parliam
If the fendition is to er retained,
the structure needs to be altered.
Model Parliament should select a
single theme to deal with each year,
said Portigal
- This way, meaningful research
would be done by each party into
the various aspects of the problem.
Such changes could lead to a re-
vitalization of the campus political
clubs. Members have to feel their
views are important, or the club
will slowly fade away, said Portigal.
“The future of the Progressive
ea hie party lies in attracting
holding young people capable
of filling is ae of leader-
ship, ” said Portigal
“The Thivecta campus is the
source of future leaders, and the
party should always keep this in
mind.”
Professors
welcome
complaints
f A professors would prefer
poe take complaints directly to
them before seeing faculty deans.
The Gateway sought professors’
reactions to the aueeeree of Dr. D.
E. ean the Faculty of
Arts that Abadia who are dis-
satisfied with their professors re-
port to the dean of their faculty.
nstructors expressed a “deaee to
ane students approach them first
ectures are not progressing sat-
isfactorily. If the situation does not
improve students are justified in
going to the dean in groups and
laying complaints :
Dr. H ennedy, assistant pro-
fessor of ‘busin ness administration
and commerce eye “a student can-
not come an y, ‘Sir, you are a
lousy se anit “This ge ee the con-
versation off to a bad s
“A student can come andy a prof if
he duns the course can be im-
proved by it. If one student is hav-
ing trouble that suggests others
might be having trouble too.”
Professors stressed students must
be objective in laying complaints.
“Students have a_ responsibility, .
both positive and negative, to help
assess a professor’s ability,” said
Dr. W. B. D. Heeney, assistant pro-
fessor of history.
Dr. John Kuspira, associate pro-~
fessor of genetics likes students to
see him directly. He a com-
iene made to the dean often is
torted as it is passed down.
he end the jeniees concerned isn’t
quite sure what the complaint is,
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
The Gateway
fine
warhorses
trample
audience
An infinitesimal percentage of
of that concert (made up of works
y Wagner and Schumann) in
this article.
I suppose that some discussion
of Eileen Farrell’s merits is in
order. I was impressed, but not
pnb ae
too ie fot the Jubilee Be
torium; 9 can be Seen eon e
even powerfully moving.
_ short, she hag all the nice
necessary to give ideal Fea
ances of Wagner and V
Yet I had othe distinct Neoliig
(especially in the Wagner “Tri-
stan” excerpt) that she was is
i
B
ations of the works w
exceptionable in every case, and
e orchestra was extremely im-
pressive in the Wagner.
e@ e @
Sunday last’s symphony case
bore the title “Hommag
France”, and consisted putirely of
nineteenth-century Gallic war-
horses: popular works of Berlioz,
Bizet, Dukas, Ravel and Franck.
been known to
whimper, but with a pene. Yes,
you’ve guessed it; Berlioz
“Roman Carnival” Overture, one
of the best bits from his Frenetic
Period. The orchestra’s perform-
ance was not without its faults,
but rose to brilliance at the fin
coda.
not ae be forgotten by
witnesse
Bizet’s ts Aslesienne” aus No.
itt was given a s mance,
d “The Samnvere Sentence
a beautifully detailed one. Then,
as a sort of balance to gain sym-
metry, came a ay bad
‘B
was taken up‘by Cesar Franck’s
Symphony in D Minor, one of the
only two Franck works played
ee of fre-
quency. Franck is o:
composers whom it is very dif-
ficult to classify.
For instance, the D Minor sym-
phony might be judged either as
a good symphony that gust misses
being great by virtue of its
er musical faux as; or =
mediocre work wi
lot of good things in i meraneke
aye surprising “hehe either
g a bad tune and de-
feiaing it very interestingly, or
Paral: These comments apply
pretty well to the performance
~
of the symphony as well.
e audience, needless to say,
lapped it all up.
The fact that ee Symphony
Society has given us consecutive
suggests some dia-
bolical plan a musical reacniiod
on its part.
But although the Society has
done German music a good ser-
formed in these parts), they have
by and large done French music
an ill one.
It is not so much the fact that
the composers played last yen
are not as s Wagner and
Schumann (indeed Basling Py as
least as good), as that those com-
posers were poorly represented.
Why doesn’t the Edmonton Sym-
phony throw caution to the winds,
and do Berlioz’ “Rom and
Juliette”, or any of the host of
great unperformed masterpieces
of that composer? Or why not do
ig toe and Chloe” mates of
“Boler
Garies music-lovers will
probably retort that the French
are just getting theirs at last, and
having been on the winning side
in both world wars.
But I suppose there is hope left.
that they are laboring under quite
horrible programing restrictions,
and that as soon as they have cast
off whatever mysterious shackles
now bind them, ill see a
veritable musical Renaissance in
Edmonton.
ike the Revolution, this
change is inevitable: ee is only a
matter of time. On its un-
eee ak signs is ihe schedul-
ing peevneky x roles pike
Solder” for’ the upcoming L:
Symphony pancee: February 1.
ea
counter-revolutionary.
—Bill Beard
miller and
oliver bring
back sheba
William Inge is NOT a great
playwright. Unfortunately in
“Come Back, Little Sheba” he
frequently gives no indication of
eing even a good playwright.
He can perhaps be lauded for
even worse, os ith clumsy and
steweiys res Be
U8 ‘adel tae performed a
feat Pens the miraculous:
ey have, largely through the
ette
piece of writing into an evening 0;
enjoyable theatre.
Bette Oliver, as Lola, domin-
ates the production. She cer-
umo she
Micteriela:
munching chocolates and listen-
ing to her favorite radio program
“Taboo-o-o” or as she so ob-
viously attempts to interrupt her
chronic boredom
is unfortunate enough to stop by
her door.
While the humor is much need-
ed in the play, it should not con-
trol the performance. Only an
actress of Miss Oliver’s excep-
tional calibre has the good sense
not to let such humor dominate,
not to make the role a mere
parody on the neuroticism of the
Ntypical” North American house-
wife.
Instead, she forces us to see the
pathos in Lola’s life, the loneliness
and meaninglessness of a mar-
bound together noe only by a
mutual need to rationalize re-
grets, and made eral only by
eavesdropping and peeking on a
solution to every problem (“Here,
let me fix you an egg”) one must
acclaim Miss Oliver’s perform-
ance as i era
Fred Miller, playing Doc, very
nearly matches her. He begins
weakly: during the opening
scenes there seems to be a certain
mechanical effort in his frustra-
tion
However, as the play progresses
and Doc’s regrets and fears be-
session with him, as he seeks
refuge once ye in alcohol, Mr.
Miller gives an increasingly
dynamic and deere te perform-
ance.
He does especially well in the
final act where he manages to
make the scene in which he re-
turns home drunk into a mag-
nificent climax, in spite of the
fact that the dialogue is an odd
combination of some of the soa
and some of the corniest lin
the ae At that moment. he
the loneliness of a woman an
her husband.
e and Miss Oliver are an ex-
cellent complement to each
other’s abilities. i
® @
Similarly flattering things can-
not be said of Robert Mumford
(Turk) or of Bonita Rose (Marie).
They are, even oe their latter
scenes, mediocr
Mr. Mumford’s role has b
poorly written—the character of
is justified in expecting a far less
shallow interpretation of the role
of Turk than Mr. Mumford pre-
sents. ;
His performance lacks con-
materialistic young woman hiding
her deception under veneer
of social correctness. She is not,
as Miss Rose attempts to suggest,
the innocent All-American Col-
lege Girl.
But the production should not
—D. Sector photo
SO THEN I SAID TO SARTRE... —In a scene from
“Winter Kept Us Warm”, an all-student feature film produced
and directed by David Sector of the University of Toronto,
Doug (John Labow) and Peter (Henry Tarvainen) take up
characteristically glib and awkward poses respectively. The
film will be shown at 8 p.m. in mp 126, February 10 to 12,
by Students’ Cinema.
be condemned on the grounds
minor roles, or that it is Pony
written. In the case, t
cellent performances of ieaing
pensated for other deficiencies in
the production.
—Shirley Neuman
this week
has four
evenings
All of a Aas eae the Arts scene
is a positive hive of activity.
I’m tempted to deliver the re-
their occurrence, not necessarily
of their importance
Tonight, Les Petits Chanteurs
t
ingi
p.m., as the
third item of this ‘hee Jeunesses
Musicales progra’ Non-JMC
Gertie are admitted for $2.00.
on
berta College at 8
kiwin report that the choir sings
its 17th-18th century program
ivinely.
Those of you who swooned
over “The Sound
it to in outa to see what a
real boys’ choir sounds like.
e @ e
This afternoon and evening, and
Thursday afternoon and evening,
Olivier’s teat ah is playing at
the Odeo
inetcatiy everybody has al-
ritish National Theatre’s pro-
- ie which has been hailed with
pn ey: meatal as the best
of the ce
Tickets ie ridiculously cheap;
early, before
332 keeners hog the best seats.
@ @ e
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
evenings, 8:15 at the Jubilee
Auditorium, the U of A Mixed
Chorus bursts yet once again into
full-throated so:
a
deserve better than to become an
imposing grey monument like the
Senate or the Students’ Union.
Various of my friends in the
Chorus have been springing out
at me from dark alleys and telling
opines that if the
tone-deaf. the tone- deat
can ogle aw:
Not, in short, Ms be missed.
The ae ed as usual, with
the Yardbird Suite’ s current pro-
duction, a rather special one:
Canada’s finest ate is read-
ing Oscar Wilde’s “ Ballad of
Reading Gaol” and ney own story ©
“The’ Travelling Nude”.
I seem to have exhausted all
my superlatives in dealing with
this week’s other events. What
canI say? That a reading of any
Kreisel story is a major Edmon- .
ton literary event? That Wilde’s
poem is without parallel in the
English language? That Dr.
Kreisel is a very fine reader in-
deed?
I don’t ies it matters; what
I really
simple.
Kreisel Friday, Saturday or Sun-
shoes night. The show starts at
Hers wishing all an exhaust- —
ing week. a.
—J. O, Thompson
—Jim MacLaren photos
ALL SORTS OF WEIRD AND WONDERFUL THINGS
HAPPENED—The Junior Bear hockey team was dumped by
the Junior B Red Wings; the Golden Bear basketball team split
a two-game session with the UAC Dinosaurs; the gym team
placed third in the provincial meet; Alberta grunt and groaners
were out grunted by Saskatchewan; and both 43-man squamish
pe were obliterated during their brief encounter Saturday
night.
A representative from the
Young Women’s
Christian Association
Will interview 1966 female graduates in
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
and
SOCIAL SCIENCE
for the positions of
General Group Program Director and
Physical and Health Education Director
February 10 and II, 1966
For an appointment contact
THE STUDENT PLACEMENT OFFICE
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
dunn Bears beat Maple Leafs;
lose to Red Wings at weekend
A goal by Ron Cebryk of the
A victory over the Edmonton
Maple Leafs Friday night and a loss
to the Edmonton Junior B Red
Wings marked Junior Bear hockey
action over the weekend.
On Friday night 45 fans saw the
Junior Bears start out fast, grab-
bing a 5-0 lead after 27 minutes
of play. A defensive lapse caused
their lead to diminish as the Maple
Leafs fired two quick goals in the
closing minutes of he first thirty-
minute period of pla
Junior Bears was the only marker
of the second period as the teams
settled down to close checking. The
final score was 6-2.
Scoring for the Junior Bears
were Ron and Richard
George with 2 each plus Gary Hut-
nan and Sam Belcourt with one
apiece. Pennel and Gibson replied
for the Maple Leafs.
On Saturday night the Junior
Bears’ six-game winning streak
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McMASTER UNIVERSITY
GRADUATE TEACHING FELLOWSHIPS
The University offers Graduate ee Fellowships to support grad-
ards
uate students working tow
Mechanical
a Masi
physics, Civil Engineering, Classics, masonic Germ:
s Degree in apes arctan mistry, Bio-
Latin,
reek,
Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering, Diaioech Political
Science, Romance Languages, Russian, Sociology and Social Anthropo-
logy; and for a Master’s or Doctor
of Philosophy Degree in Biology,
Chemical Engineering, Chemical Bhpetos: Chemistry, Electrical Engin-
Abas English, Geochemistry, Geography, Geology, Histo:
ry, Mathematics,
tallurgy, Molecular Biology, Physics, Psychology past "the Religious
Sciences:
The Fellowships vary in value but in all cases the stipends provide
adequate support for a full year’s
study.
are renewable for
subsequent years. Holders of Fellowships will devote approximately one-
fifth of their time to instructional dutie
Travel advances are al eg to Sorist students who are coming to the
University from distant poi
Further information Laie soe red forms may be obtained from:
The Dean of Graduate Studies,
McMaster Valgersity, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
was snapped as the Junior B Red
Wings came through with a 5-1
victory.
For two periods of play the Red
Wings completely outclassed the
Junior Bears by passing, checking
and shooting well. The Oil Kings’
affiliates chalked up an almost in-
surmountable lead of five goals as
Humphreys, Birdsell, Mortinon,
Bredan and Zanussi put the puck in
the net. Gary Hutnan scored the
lone Bear go
The Junior Heaya showed some
improvement in the final period,
pee the Wings scoreless but,
, they had a bad night. The
coe revealed it has weaknesses in
shooting that didn’t stand out
against previous easier competition.
The Bears do have the potential to
score more goals, as verified by the
number of scoring opportunities
they had throughout the game.
Thirty fans, nonethless, enjoyed
a sound team performance i be
part of the Junior B Red Win;
OPTOMETRISTS
Drs. LeDrew, Rowand,
McClung and Jones
12318 Jasper Avenue
Telephone 488-0944.
South Side Office—
8123 - 104 St. 433-7305
CONTACT LENSES
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
Intramura
Scorecard
By ALEX HARDY
As of the press deadline it was
still anyone’s guess who would cart
home the men’s intramural Division
I hockey championship.
pesca Education and Engin-
were to have met in a play-
off for the title. The icp geri
game was necessitated when the
two clubs tied for top spot in inter-
league playoffs.
Phys Ed, the League “A” winner,
trounced Leagu: e “C” champion St.
Joseph’s 7-3, Sila the Engineers
edged past St. Joe’s 3-2 in a hotly-
disputed overtime contest.
What complicated matters was a
2-2 overtime tie between Phys Ed
and Engineering. Ken Dmytryshyn
potted both Engineering goals, with
Bob Norman and Len Zaichowsky
replying for the Phys Eders.
Phys Ed. made the round-robin
finals after it Fg spent they had
been bounced by Lambda Chi Al-
pha in a playoff aah the League “A”
crown. LCA won 3-2 in overtime,
but the intramural office ruled
against overtime and ordered the
game replayed. This time it's Ed
made no mistake, winning 8-
St. Joe’s likewise needed a 3-2
playoff win over the Phi Delts to
reach the finals,
Don Sheldon of Delta Upsilon
and Les Sundquist of Upper Resi-
dence tied for top spot in the re-
cent basketball free throw compe-
tition. Each hit on 25 of 30 at-
tempts. Tim Kallal of Medicine and
Bob Jones of Arts and Science were
next with 24 apiece.
A second-quarter outburst that
left the eppcaiine gasping was goo
enough to give Arts and Science
“B” the Division II men’s intra-
setts basketball title Pecaehae
The Arts crew racked up 16
points in the second period, then
held off a stiff late-game rally by
Physical Education “C” for a 36
29 decision.
The game, a sudden-death affair,
was needed after the two clubs tied
for first place in the pre-Christmas
league. Division I and III cham-
pions were decided in round-robin
playoffs in December.
Another playoff was required to
determine third place in Division
II. The spot went to Delta Upsilon
oa sath ‘ow 37-33 winners over
Latter Day Saints “B”.
Bob Jones netted 11 points to
pace Arts’ victory.. Eight came in
the second quarter, as the winners
built up a commanding 23-12 half-
time bulge. Phys Ed outscored Arts
17-13 in the final half. Bryan Rakoz
swished 13 in a losing cause.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR
1966 GRADUATES IN MATHEMATICS
with the
Department of Insurance
OTTAWA TORONTO and MONTREAL
as
ACTUARIAL ASSISTANTS
$5,790 - $7,300
—and—
ACTUARIAL SUPERVISORS
$5,050 cat $5,800
@
Details and application forms available at your University Place-
ment Office. Competition Numbers 66-6400 and 66-6401 refer.
ORE-WA
ticket. y
Split with Dinos keeps Bears
in race for WCIAA championship
By BRYAN CAMPBELL
The basketball Bears split a two-
game series with the University of
Alberta Calgary Dinosaurs at the
weekend.
The Dinos ‘took Friday’s game
85-76, but the Bears came back on
Saturday with 78-76 victory.
On Friday, the Bears came out
hot and used a tight zone defence
to frustrate the Dinosaur squad.
Barry Mitchelson and Darwin
Semotiuk piled up point after point
to give the Bears a 36-34 lead at
the half-way mark.
In the second half the Dinosaurs’
full-court press began to take its
toll and the Bear lead evaporated.
A full-court press resembles a
tight, forechecking hockey team.
The idea is to bottle up the other
team in their own end, so the
pressing team plays with four men
forward and one man back.
The press is usually ee on the
throw-in after basket, and when
the man on side lines throws
the ball the peegitie squad double-
teams the receiver.
The press is a gamble—if the
team under press can break a man
free down the sidelines and get the
ball to abe it almost always means
a baske
The eae rattled under press
and their misplays cost them the
game.
With five minutes remaining, the
Dinosaurs had a slim edge. Then
they swished the twine for six-in-
a-row and coasted home for the
victory.
High scorer in the hard-fought
Loe was 674”, 220 lb., Bear for-
ard, Barry Mitchelson with 24.
Robin Fry led the Calgary scoring
parade with 20 followed by Hans
Schamp and Ken Shields with 15
each.
Edmonton guards, Bruce Blum-
ell and Darwin Semotiuk, netted
17 and 12 respectively.
After the game, Bear coach, Jim
Munro, felt Saturday would be a
different story.
It was—the Bears led right from
the opening tip-off and piled-up
a 44-28 half-time margin.
It seemed. as though the Bears
had solved the Dinosaur puzzle—
ey looked a smoother and more
competent club as they showed
e Calgary squad the lower half
of the scoreboard:
ut the Dinosaurs came out
breathing fire in the second half.
They screwed on the press with
bitter resolve and nnantan the
didn’t ae
never trailed by more than eight
ts i e last half. With five
minutes re go they broke the
Dinosaur’s t stanza rush and
tied the score at 70 eac!
A series of personal aa technical
fouls gave the Bears a 175-70
margin as the clock started to run
out and the Bears ragged the ball
and stalled for time.
But the Dinosaurs weren't
through—they were setting up the
tying basket when the game ended.
Robin Fry led the scoring with
28 points, followed closely by Dar-
win Semotiuk with 24. Ed Blott
had one of his best nights, getting
17 points along with Barry Michel-
son. Dinosaur forward, Wayne
Thomas, added 15 points.
The Bears took 14 fouls and the
Dinosaurs 25. The difference here
more than makes up the two point
margin. Friday’s game went two
better with 41 fouls.
e weekend contests leave the
‘ Bears in second place with a 4-2,
won-loss, record.
e Dinosaurs
hold down first with ‘ule one de-
feat in six starts.
This weekend the Bears travel
to Calgary for the second part of
the gruelling home and home
series. The Bears will have to take
both games from the Dinosaurs if
they want to stay alive in the race
for the WCIAA championship.
NO, I WANT IT
—Jim MacLaren photo
. . Hectic Bear-Dinosaur action
Bears
and/or Dinos
capture squamish title
Did the Golden Bears extincter-
ate the Dinosaurs in the 43-man
squamish championship at the
weekend?
The competition and brawl all
eee a ae took place at
h of the regular
Baar Dinesaik basketball tussle.
We know who won the basket-
ball, but no one left their lights
on in the parking lot, so there was
no one to settle the dispute over
the final score.
Squamish rules stipulate that
Ship a person who has left his car
running and the lights on can settle
such an argument,
At the flip of the pesata the two
teams charged and the. contest
headed for the history books. The
battle will rank with Dieppe raid
as one of the bloodiest encounters
this side of the TV screen.
The Calgary squad started the
action quickly and using their
frullips (a frullip is a hooked club
used to move the ball and opposing
players) skillfully cleared a path
part-way down the floor.
But the pritz (the ball in squam-
ish language) never got to the
centre stripe. The inside grouch
carrying the ball cut down with a
flying tackle and a melee ensued.
Forty assorted players piled on and
even the Probate judge—one of the
three officials in’ squamish—
couldn’t keep order.
He had no authority anyway
since the game was Aor under-
way.
But all was not lost. The Red
Baron appeared out of a near-by
phone booth and cleaned the mess
up.
Swinging into the action in his
red-wet-suit the Baron forcibly
removed 10 Dinosaurs from the
pile and the rush for the goal line
got moving again.
The Calgary squad was losing
players by the minute so they
nabbed a nifty cheerleader and
used her for the pritz. She got
squashed at the bottom of the pile
before she could get back to the
bench.
Pieces of clothing started to
clutter the floor—old helmets,
flippers and masks impeded for-
ward progress as the teams bogged
down in a centre-court brawl.
Even the forward pass failed as
the teams got down to the more
serious mano-a-mano brand of
squamish. ;
The clock ran out before tempers
did and the game was over. But
the dispute lives on.
Who did win the brawl? Who
scored and when? Did anyone try
to score?
The question must be settled
soon since the world championship
is coming up against the Peking
Paper Tigers early in 1976.
Rumour has it the teams will
meet next weekend in Calgary,
but as yet it has been neither
confirmed or denied by any of the
hospitalized egase f
Bears look eood
U of A quartet shines
in city - national game
By RICHARD VIVONE
Friday night at the Edmonton
Gardens was a rare exception to
the old proverb “all that glitters is
not gold”.
Although the combined Oil King-
Golden Bear-Nugget squad was
beaten 4-3 by the Canadian Nation-
al team, the gold was the men
wearing the flashy gold helmets of
the Golden Bears and they glitter-
ed like gold never did.
Wilf Martin, Austin Smith, Brian
Harper and goaler Bob Wolfe were
chosen to represent the Bears.
Coach Ray Kinasewich logically
put the trio together and after a
difficult first period, re played
like pros.
They skated well, forechecked
like demons and took time out to
score two of the three Star goals.
“Easily the best line on the ice”
was the general comment after the
game as the Bears thrilled the fans
with some sparkling manoeuvers.
The early trouble was due to
having two centremen on one line.
Martin and Smith are pivots and
Smith, relegated to right wing for
the evening, found himself straying
from his post. The situation was
ironed out and the line went to
work.
Early in the pene period, Smith
found Martin at centre ice and hit
him with a Dericut pass. Martin
bore down on the National’s net
and using Harper as a decoy,
cashed in on a low 25-footer.
; ee goal at 4:02 gave the Stars a
With 90 seconds remaining in the
contest and the National team en-
joying a 3-2 lead, the Bear line
brought the cr rowd to its feet as
Harper grabbed a loose puck, went
in alone and knotted the score.
The Stars used Bear goaler Bob
Wolfe in the third and overtime
periods. The rookie blocked 10
shots in the period but was beaten
once. He made one stop in the
overtime but the rebound was
pune’ in for a National victory
at 0:41.
Wolfe played well. e was
beaten cleanly us on tallies but
showed confide and poise i
facing the National’s firing brigade.
The stellar performance by the
four Bears illustrates once more the
excellent talent representing the
school.
The Nationals = the best ama-
teur team in untry and just
being able to aay on the ice with
is an accomplishment. To
Guiplay the team is something again
and put a feather in the Bears’ hat.
The Player's Jacket--—— fashioned by BANTAMAC in Terylene*, a Cel-Cil fibre. *Reg'd. Can. T.M.
Come on over to smoothness
with no letdown in taste —
Come on over to
New!
Player's
Kings
MILTER KINGS
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
11
—Jim MacLaren photo
HERE’S YOUR CHANGE SIR—One of the Junior B Redwings turns on a dime to get back
into the fray during Saturday night’s match with the Junior Bears.
beaten soundly with a resultant 5-1 score at the final whistle.
The Junior Bears were
LJC, SAIT hand first losses
of season to U of A Bearcats
By LAWRENCE HIGNELL
The Bearcats received an inhos-
pitable southern welcome over the
weekend as they suffered their first
two losses of the season.
Travelling to Lethbridge on Fri-
day, the Junior Varsity team lost
81- M40 io Lethbridge Junior College
and then suffered defeat at the
hands of SAIT, 77-75 on Saturday.
- Friday, the Bearcats started the
game well, as they matched baskets
with Lethbridge, but early ‘fouls
a to be the key factor in the
With slightly over three minutes
on the clock both Hasselfield and
Kozub ane committed three per-
sonal
For fifteen minutes of the first
half the Bearcats remained in range
of Lethbridge and the score was 29-
26 for Lethbridge with 6:56 left to
play. :
In the last six minutes, Leth-
bridge went on a scoring spree and
held a 47-38 half-time lead.
The Bearcats came out in the
second half determined to close the
gap, but the early loss of Kozub
with five fouls set the team back.
The Bearcats fought back to
within 7 points with fine field
shooting from guard Ben Uenen
The loss of Urner With two min-
utes left to play, put the game out
of reach and the game ended 81-70
for Lethbridge.
Urner was the star of the game
as he scored 24 points on a 60 per
cent average from the field. Mel
Read followed with 12 points while
Skribe and Kozub potted 10 apiece.
Toyton with 23 and Gladstone
with 14 were the top Lethbridge
scorers.
Saturday, the Bearcats took an
early command of the game as they
out-hustled the SAIT team. Only
excellent foul shooting in the first
half kept SAIT in the game as the
half ended 29-26 for the Bearcats.
John Hasselfield, guard for the
The Supervisor of Western Canadian Offices for the
New York Life Insurance Company will interview pro-
spective executive trainees for Western Canada at the
University of Alberta on Tuesday, February 8th.
Students graduating in Arts (Economics-Psycho-
logy) Law, and Commerce should contact the National
Employment Service on campus for further informa-
tion and to arrange an interview.
New York Life Insurance Company
230 Bentall Building, Phone 424-7184
Bearcats, started off strong and
potted 9 of the ’Cats first 14 points.
In the second half, the game
opened up a ne more as bo
eams used fast breaks to score
quick points.
Up until the last three minutes,
the Bearcats held a three to five
point lead with fine rebounding
from Gerry Kozub and Mel Read.
With a little over two minutes re- —
maining, the Bearcats went into a
stall to veo their five point lend
SAIT stole the ball with one
minute left and scored rabid baskets
and a free throw to tie the game at
the end of regulation time.
oa the overnite period the Bear-
ts took a quick five point lead
Ear sloppy passing reduced the lead
to BS slim one point.
o fouls in the final sec-
oe nee SAIT a two point edge
and they held it for their first vic-
tory of the seas
Hasselfield led the Bearcats with
14 points, followed by Kozub with
11, and Read with 10. High scorers
for SAIT were Kimmel and Myers
with 21 apiece.
Moochigan
show highlights
Native Week
An all-Indian and Metis cast will
perform at 7:30 tonight in Con Hall.
Moochigan Varieties will feature
Duke Redbird, vice-president of
Canadian Indian Youth Council;
Hobbema native dancers in cos-
tume; dancers from the ian-—
Metis Friendship Center in Edmon-
ton; a Cree choir; country and
western singers; the Firestrings;
and Adrian Hope, a Cree scholar.
The program, part of Canadian.
Native Week, is organized and run
by the native performers.
The dances and songs are ones
which were Sao by the Indians
from the early settlers
Siem to Moochiens Varie-
ti
THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, February 2, 1966
Canadian University Press
DATELINE
Levesque predicts takeover
MONTREAL—English Canadian businessmen who operate
on a unilingual basis should “get out of their Rhodesian frame of
mind before it is too late.”
This was the advice of Quebec’s Family and Social Welfare
Minister Rene aes a at an open meeting of the McGill
Liberal Club Jan.
Mr. Levesque Jae he was in favor of preserving the two
official languages of the province but French should -be re-
a as the “language with the priority.”
y this, he said, he does not mean unilin gualism,” the narrow
uncivilized, collectively stupid policy as set up in the other
provinces.’
However, the English Canadians who have until now domin-
ated the economic life of Quebec must learn to respect the
language of “almost 80 per cent of the people.”
“Our ultimate aim is to take over fea: economic life of Quebec.
We must go slowly because of suc gs as nervous money
markets. But we will use any legitimate means at our Since
and someday we shall succeed,” he said.
“It is unreasonable to think that any people will remain
servants in their home once they have the means to- take over
their economy.”
Students protest parking fees
HAMILTON—McMaster University students have taken to
the streets in the current parking fee crisis here
A group of students early in the morning of aan) 10 blocked
parking lot entrances and Pee to ey their operation,
although university president H. ad announced that
student protests would not affect re Bainintrationd policy.
The “park-in” was organized by an ad hoc committee of the
Students’ Representative Assembly to pai: parking conditions
and the recent imposition of a parking fe
Four students stalled their cars in ty entrants to the lots
but city police were already on the scene. One student had his
driver’s licence taken an officer, and recovered it only by
the efforts of hie lawyer aoe in
Other students picketed entrance booths or distracted park-
ing officials by paying fees with pennies, cheques, and American
bills.
A campus policeman was reported to have exhorted drivers
to “run over” demonstrators blocking their entrance to the lots.
College may withdraw from CUS
WINNIPEG—The CUS chairman at United College presented
a motion to student council Jan. 10, asking the body to drop
out of CUS.
Following the council ee CUS chairman Jim Lightbody
said in an interview: “We pay $900 a year to be a member o
CUS( 60 cents per cosdienty: $400 for travel to CUS conventions
and seminars (to which we send four people)-and this year
we'll be 'spending $600 on the Nationsl Debating Finals. That’s
a total of $1,900 going to CUS this year.
“The University of Manitoba sends over $8,000 to CUS.
That’s $10,000 from Manitoba. For this money we get eight
representatives in Ottawa, some of them second-rate fumblers
of whom two are part-time lobbyists. Since education is pro-
vincially orientated, the lobbying should be done at the pro-
vincial level, not in Ottawa. For the same amount of money,
we could have a very effective lobby in Manitoba,” he sai
Concluding that a provincial association could asia the
same services as does, Mr. Lightbody said that
Canadian University Press could keep students up to date on
what students are doing across Canada.
Turning to the CUS international affairs program, he said:
“CUS has no power in international affairs and is just wasting
its time. Who cares if CUS is in favor of boycotting South
Africa or not.”
Students seek republic status
MONTRE AL—The newly founded Quebec Union of Liberal
Students has come out in favor of Canada leaner: its con-
stitutional monarchy and declaring itself a repu
The move came at the opening conference of the union whose
membership is predominantly English speaking, Jan. 22.
legates to the meeting also asked the federal government to call
a constitutional conference in conjunction with the provinces
to draw up a new constitution for Cana
measure has also been cagpesied sas ee
Such. a
Deader ee Diefenbaker and the Conservative Par
:. The new federation of Quebec student Liberals a concern
itself with both federal and provincial politics, unlike the adult
party in the province which has separate federations for the two.
y Elected president of the new union was Guy Wilson of the
' University of Montreal. Mr. Wilson said the group started
recruiting members in August and now has about 700; 500 of
whom are English-speaking, 200 goa seeaking.
A LEAF FROM THE FARMER’S BOOK—Labelling bovines to foil hunters is supposedly
an old ag trick. However, the meds have a penchant for marking everything so this poor star
of this year’s Med Show was engraved too. The Med Show was held last Thursday and Fri-
day nights in Studio Theatre, playing to its usual capacity crowd.
—John Westmore photo
Fulton - Favreau formula draws
mixed reactions from conference
By DAVID ESTRIN
WINNIPEG—The pecnaved. F Ful-
ton-Favreau formula to end
pede constitution is “a *Niead
duck.
As as result, 50 student delegates
attending a conference this week-
end at the University of Manitoba
campus on “repatriation of the
Canadian ‘constitution” found the
topic to be more of a practical
nature than even the conference
organizers had thought. This was
a result of Quebec Premier Le-
sage’s rejection Friday of the most
agreeable formula ever proposed
for the purpose.
But agreeable as it may have
been to nine provincial legislatures
and the federal government, a
federal cabinet minister’s lawyer
agreed at Sunday’s closing session
of St. Paul’s College second annual
Canadian afafirs conference that
the Fulton-Favreau formula was
both totally unnecessary and highly
dangerous.
“Thank goodness it’s dead,” said
D. Gibson, professor of con-
stitutional law at the U of M Law
School.
VIABLE CONSTITUTIO
“It’s regrettable, but at ex-
because we
shouldn’t over-emphasize the place
of formal amendment in making a
viable Canadian constitution,” Hon.
ean-Luc Papin, minister of Mines
and Technical Surveys, told the
delegates.
It was “regrettable” for Mr.
Papin because Quebec approval
would have paved the way for the
Liberal Government to have given
ee be ovale puinoas made i
Canadians as on
herniated birthday present: one
student delegate era a
owever, the minister himself
said, “like the ma flag and the
national anthem, a perme con-
stitution amendable in Canada
would have been a Katara step in
giving Canada the symbols of
national maturity.
Delegates cared that pea one
certainly many
amending the constitution ides
the formal method proposed in the
Fulton-Favreau form
“Real constitutional change takes
place by convention and by or-
dinary statutes,” said Mr. Papin.
“The FFF, if adopted previously
would have been so rigid that per-
haps but two of the 15 amend-
ments ever made to our con-
stitution would have been passed.”
ALLO NT!
As a result of both formal and
informal methods of amending the
constitution, Mr. Gibson claimed
Canada “has one of the best com-
Project volunteers gain
understanding
U of A students working in the
Wauneita tutoring program are
benefiting from a year-round ex-
posure to the problem of under-
standing Indian students.
The program, which began in
October, involves 17 Indian stu-
dents who are living in residence
in Jasper Place and 21 U of.A
students.
A tour of the campus in October
pata es erthoaterd for study at
the university. The greatest sur-
prise for the visitors was the size
of the campus e amount of
hm necessary between build-
see
is a twice weekly pro-
ject spe Wadseda lay and Thursday
nights. Wednesday nights a school
of Indians
bus financed by a local group of
women takes the students to and
from the campus while on Thurs-
day nights, some of the student
tutors provide transportation for
their pupi
The tutoring program will con-
tinue until the end of February.
The Glenrose hospital project
has not been as successful.
volunteers initiated the project,
but now there are only 12 active
workers.
Reason for the decrease in
volunteers was given as lack of or-
ganization at the hospital.
any students have gone there
and have not felt needed so they
have dropped out,” said- Sheila
arrett, house ec 3, service co-
ordinator
: ton-Favneau: Form
promises between flexibility and
rigidity existing in any federal
jurisdiction. The present system
has allowed more amendments
than either the American or
Australian constitutions,” he said.
Both agreed the idea of a written
constitution for any state is be-
less feasible than ever
before.
“The actual forces at work can’t
be put into a pone text,”
Mr. Papin said, “Too many French-
Canadian politicians are suffering
from legalit
But at ihe: same time he warned
that like French-Canada before the
beginning of the quiet revolution,
English-Canada is sitting on the
pay Gaede after having heen put
nm the defensive by Que
neWe should ae ata
the constitution, sail it shouldn’t
be done now,” apin suggest-
ed. And if Mr. Diefenbaker's sug-
gestion for a constitutional con-
ference were followed up, it would
be “the greatest circus this side of
Hell.”
¢
POLITICAL UTILITY
Mr. in said he saw the
Lesage rejection as an example of
political utility.
He refused to get py 3 between
those who claim the would
have been too rigid to pital the
federal government from increas-
ing its powers, and those who on
be too rigid in
wick Quebec could achieve its
goa.
att the present constitution is so
bad, how did it allow the Quebec
government to do all the things
associated with its new powe
economic-social status?” Mr. Pa-
pin asked.
Although it may have been a
pou ieely wise move, it may lose
Mr. Lesage more votes than he wi
gain in the next provincial election.
through simple conservatism, lack
of originality, or through fear, we
are going to make it a subject of
division in Canada. If Diefen-
baker does this, it will ot un-
ipieret hed venom to Canadian poli-
“We definitely lack _ political
maturity if we sivide ¢ on: 1-